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Lucie Kaledoka, 38, in the Batanga transit centre for refugees from Central African Republic (CAR). Since she was a girl, Lucie had been disabled. She was never able to straighten her leg. Italian doctors, who came to her village, performed surgery to give her some mobility but before her cast was removed, Seleka forces attacked the village. "People were running in all directions like children," Lucie recalls. "I couldn't stay, because a bullet can kill." Lucie's husband carried her in his arms to the banks of the Oubangi River while their son brought a small sack containing clothes and a few other items the family couldn't leave behind. They crossed to the Democratic Republic of Congo, arriving at the town of Libenge. Since the day they arrived in DRC, none of her family have been back across the border. The most important thing that Lucie was able to bring with her is the Bible that her son holds in this photograph. "The Bible is important to me because it is the word of God. It guides me in my life. When I open it and read, it tells me how to behave." A church leader in her community, Lucie now prays in her family's shelter in Boyabo. She looks forward to being able to lead services and teach Bible classes to young people once a church is established in the camp.